Kirton v. Bull

68 S.W. 927, 168 Mo. 622, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 927 (Kirton v. Bull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirton v. Bull, 68 S.W. 927, 168 Mo. 622, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 218 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

BRACE, P. J.

— This is an action in ejectment, in which plaintiffs seek to recover possession of the undivided iiveMxths of a tract of land in Cooper county, containing 320 acres, of which they allege they are tenants in common with the defendant. -The judgment was for the plaintiffs, and the defendant appeals.

The parties are the heirs at law of John Bull, deceased, who died in possession of the premises in the year 1872. The record title is in George W. Bull, a brother of the said John, who died in the same year. John Bull went into possession of the premises in the year 1843, and thereafter continued in the peaceful and uninterrupted possession of the same until his death in 1872, and thereafter his widow continued in like possession until her death in 1892. The defendant, one of the sons of John Bull, was living with his father, on the premises where he died, and thereafter in like manner continued to' live on the premises with his mother until her death in 1892, and thereafter remaining in possession of the premises and refusing to make partition thereof with the plaintiffs, the other heirs at law, children and grandchildren of the said John Bull, and asserting right and title to the premises exclusive of them, this suit was brought.

The petition is in the usual form.

The answer contained a general denial and two special pleas.

First, a parol contract, which defendant alleges was duly performed by him, by which his uncle, the said George W. Bull, agreed in the year 1866, that, if defendant would move on the farm, and care for same, and also support, care for and maintain -the said John Bxdl and his wife SO' long as said John Bxxll should live, the said George W. Bull would convey the premises to the defendant.

[628]*628Second, a judgment of the circuit court of Cooper county-in favor of the defendant against the heirs at law of George W. Bull deceased in a proceeding under section 6770, Revised Statutes 1889, vesting their title to the premises in the defendant.

On motion of plaintiff, the special pleas were stricken from the answer, and the case was tried before the court without a jury upon the issues raised by the general denial. At the close of the evidence, the court overruled a demurrer to the evidence, and declared the law of the case as follows:

FOB PLAINTIFF.

“1. The court declares the law to be that possession taken under a parol gift is adverse in the donee against the donor, and that if George Bull bought the land sued for, for his brother, John Bull, and put the latter in possession thereof under a parol gift in the year 1844, and that John Bull built a house thereon, and moved upon said land with his familv and continued thereafter to reside upon, use and occupy said land, and to exercise the usual acts of ownership over the same for more than twenty years, and that this was known to his brother, George W. Bull, then at the expiration of the twenty years the legal title to said land vested in said John Bull, and upon his death in 1872 the title to said land descended to his children, share and share alike, subject to the quarantine and dower rights of his widow, and upon her death in the year 1892, they became entitled to the possession of said land, and the court will so find.

“2. If the court believes from the evidence, that, in the year 1843 or 1844, George Bull bought the land in controversy for his brother, John Bull, and made a parol gift thereof to him, and put said John Bull in possession thereof, and said John Bull 'built a house thereon and moved upon it with his family and used it as his own, and that the said John [629]*629Bull remained in the open, continuous and notorious adverse possession thereof from and after the year 1844 until his death in 1872, and that his widow lived upon said land until her death in the year 1892, and that the plaintiffs, George J. Bull, Elizabeth Jane Kirton and Virginia McClain are children of the said John Bull, deceased, and that J. W. Bull and Lavina Larimore are the only children surviving J. W. M. Bull, a deceased son of the said John Bull, and that George Norris and Lena Norris, plaintiffs herein, are the only surviving heirs of Lavina Bull Oglesby, a deceased daughter of the said John Bull, and that these, together with defendant, Thomas Bull, are the only heirs of said John Bull, then the court must find that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover five-sixths of said land; notwithstanding the court may further find and believe from the evidence that defendant Thomas H. Bull moved upon said land with the permission and consent of his father, and resided thereon with his father and mother until their death, and had the active management of the farming operations upon said land.

“3. If the court believes from the evidence, that in the year 1844 John Bull took possession of the land in controversy under parol gift thereof from his brother George Bull to him, then the possession taken under said parol gift was adverse in said donee against the said donor, and twenty years continuous possession thereafter on the part of said John Bull would perfect his title to said land as against the said George Bull.

“4. If the court believes from the evidence, that in the year 1844, John Bull, now deceased, took possession of the land in controversy under a parol gift thereof from his brother George Bull to him, and that said John Bull remained in possession thereof for more than twenty years claiming it as his own, with the knowledge of the said George Bull, then the legal title to said land was vested in the said John Bull, and the statute of limitations would not run in favor of [630]*630Thomas IT. Bull against the other heirs of the said John Bull during the lifetime of the widow of the said John Bull, deceased.

“Which said declarations of law asked by the plaintiffs the court gave; to which action and ruling of the court the defendant, by counsel, duly excepted at the time.”

ROE DEFENDANT.

“4. If the court shall believe and find from the evidence that George W. Bull, in 1843, purchased the land in the petition described, and received a deed conveying and vesting the title thereof in him, and that John Bull entered into possession of said land, recognizing that George W. Bull was the owner thereof; and that said John Bull remained upon said land until his death without informing, notifying, or doing some act or acts to advise George W. Bull that he was holding said land in hostility to the title of the said George W. Bull, then the judgment and finding of the court should be for the defendant.”

(1) It is contended that the trial court erred in striking out the special defenses set up in the answer. In neither of these pleas is it alleged that plaintiffs claim title under George W. Bull, nor do they contain any allegations connecting plaintiffs with his title, or tending to show that any contract made by George W. Bull, or any judgment rendered against his heirs, had any binding force on the plaintiffs, hence, the materiality of the allegation therein contained did not appear on the face of these pleas, and the court did not err in striking them out, for that reason. The fact is, the defendant was not claiming title under George W. Bull, but by possession adverse to that title, and these pleas added nothing to the force of the general denial under which, in ejectment, the defendant may offer evidence of'any matter tend[631]*631ing to defeat the plaintiff’s action. [7 Ency. of Plead. and Prac., 340.]

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 927, 168 Mo. 622, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirton-v-bull-mo-1902.